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Veyrin

Veyrin was a minor god in the Thauzunian Orthodoxy, associated with broken oaths, violated contracts, and the consequences of failed obligation. In pre-Fall belief, Veyrin did not represent deception or rebellion, but the condition that arose when binding commitments were broken after formal recognition.
  Orthodox doctrine treated broken oaths as destabilizing events rather than moral failings. Veyrin embodied the damage caused when trust systems failed. A broken oath was believed to weaken not only the parties involved, but the surrounding institutional framework. Veyrin was not invoked to punish, but acknowledged as present when obligation collapsed.
  Veyrin was closely associated with legal breaches, treaty violations, and abandonment of sworn duty. Pre-Fall teachings emphasized that obligation carried weight beyond personal intent. Breaking an oath transferred responsibility into Veyrin’s domain, where consequences were systemic rather than individual. His presence marked failure of reliability rather than active wrongdoing.
  No knowledge of Veyrin survives into the post-Fall era. There are no remaining references to his name, symbols, or associated doctrines in modern Vey’Zari society. The Thauzunian Orthodoxy itself is unknown, and with its disappearance, all formal understanding of Veyrin vanished. He is not remembered, feared, or symbolically preserved.
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